Larvaceans or appendicularians, class Appendicularia, are solitary, free-swimming
tunicate
A tunicate is a marine invertebrate animal, a member of the subphylum Tunicata (). It is part of the Chordata, a phylum which includes all animals with dorsal nerve cords and notochords (including vertebrates). The subphylum was at one time ca ...
s found throughout the world's oceans. Like most tunicates, larvaceans are
filter feeders
Filter feeders are a sub-group of suspension feeding animals that feed by straining suspended matter and food particles from water, typically by passing the water over a specialized filtering structure. Some animals that use this method of feedin ...
. Unlike most other tunicates, they keep their tadpole-like shape as adults, with the
notochord
In anatomy, the notochord is a flexible rod which is similar in structure to the stiffer cartilage. If a species has a notochord at any stage of its life cycle (along with 4 other features), it is, by definition, a chordate. The notochord consis ...
running through the tail. They can be found in the
pelagic zone
The pelagic zone consists of the water column of the open ocean, and can be further divided into regions by depth (as illustrated on the right). The word ''pelagic'' is derived . The pelagic zone can be thought of as an imaginary cylinder or wa ...
, specifically in the
photic zone
The photic zone, euphotic zone, epipelagic zone, or sunlight zone is the uppermost layer of a body of water that receives sunlight, allowing phytoplankton to perform photosynthesis. It undergoes a series of physical, chemical, and biological proc ...
, or sometimes deeper. They are transparent
plankton
Plankton are the diverse collection of organisms found in Hydrosphere, water (or atmosphere, air) that are unable to propel themselves against a Ocean current, current (or wind). The individual organisms constituting plankton are called plankt ...
ic animals, usually ranging from to in body length including the tail, although
giant larvaceans can reach up to in length.
Larvaceans are known for the large houses they build around their bodies to assist in filter-feeding. Secreted from mucus and cellulose, these structures often comprise several layers of filters and can reach up to ten times their body length. In some genera like ''
Oikopleura
''Oikopleura'' is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small par ...
'', houses are built and discarded every few hours, with sinking houses playing a key role in the
oceanic carbon cycle
The oceanic carbon cycle (or marine carbon cycle) is composed of processes that exchange carbon between various pools within the ocean as well as between the atmosphere, Earth interior, and the seafloor. The carbon cycle is a result of many inter ...
.
History
The study of larvaceans began with the description of ''Appendicularia flagellum'' by Chamisso and Eysenhardt in 1821.
[This first description would later be considered insufficient, leading to ''Appendicularia'' becoming a ]nomen nudum
In taxonomy, a ''nomen nudum'' ('naked name'; plural ''nomina nuda'') is a designation which looks exactly like a scientific name of an organism, and may have originally been intended to be one, but it has not been published with an adequate descr ...
until its reuse by Fol in 1874 under its modern definition. More species were quickly discovered, with ''
Oikopleura
''Oikopleura'' is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small par ...
'' in 1830 providing the first evidence of the larvacean house, although its role in feeding wouldn't be understood until Eisen's discoveries in 1874.
Early conjectures
Larvaceans as tunicates
Huxley was the first to suggest the identity of larvaceans as tunicates in 1851. Their relationship with other tunicates remained unclear, with larvaceans being argued to be
ascidian
Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians, tunicates (in part), and sea squirts (in part), is a polyphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" ...
larvae or a free-swimming generation of ascidians.
An attempt at establishing the internal phylogeny of the class was realized by Fol following the discovery of the aberrant ''
Kowalevskia''. Fol grouped together the families
Oikopleuridae
Oikopleuridae is a family of larvacean tunicates (class Appendicularia).
References
* Van der Land, J. (2001). Appendicularia, in: Costello, M.J. et al. (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in ...
and
Fritillariidae in the putative Endostyla, based on the presence of an endostyle, absent in ''Kowalevskia'' which he placed in the sister group Anendostyla.
In situ observations
Another jump in the study of larvaceans was the beginning of ''in situ'' observations, which allowed to study the creatures inside their fragile houses without damage. Researchers such as
Kakani Katija Young
Kakani Katija is a Biological engineering, bioengineer from Hawaii. While earning her Master's and PhD in Aeronautics and Bioengineering, Katija began to study the mechanics of swimming and feeding marine organisms.
Biography
Education
Kakani ...
from the
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a private, non-profit oceanographic research center in Moss Landing, California. MBARI was founded in 1987 by David Packard, and is primarily funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation ...
pioneered imaging techniques such as the
particle image velocimetry instrument DeepPIV, revealing the complexity and inner structure of larvacean houses and leading to the first 3D simulations of their internal currents.
Anatomy
The adult larvaceans resemble the
tadpole
A tadpole is the larval stage in the biological life cycle of an amphibian. Most tadpoles are fully aquatic, though some species of amphibians have tadpoles that are terrestrial. Tadpoles have some fish-like features that may not be found i ...
-like larvae of most
tunicate
A tunicate is a marine invertebrate animal, a member of the subphylum Tunicata (). It is part of the Chordata, a phylum which includes all animals with dorsal nerve cords and notochords (including vertebrates). The subphylum was at one time ca ...
s. Like a common tunicate larva, the adult Appendicularia have a discrete trunk and tail. It was originally believed that larvaceans were neotenic tunicates, giving them their common name. Recent studies hint at an earlier divergence, with
ascidians
Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians, tunicates (in part), and sea squirts (in part), is a polyphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" ...
having developed their sessile adult form later on.
As the larvae of ascidian tunicates don't feed at all, the larvae of doliolids goes through their metamorphosis while still inside the egg, and salps and pyrosomes have both lost the larval stage, it makes the larvaceans the only tunicates that feed and has fully functional internal organs during their tailed "tadpole stage", which in Appendicularia is permanent.
The full development of ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' and the fate of its cell lineages have been well-documented, providing insight into larvacean anatomy.
Being a
model organism
A model organism (often shortened to model) is a non-human species that is extensively studied to understand particular biological phenomena, with the expectation that discoveries made in the model organism will provide insight into the workin ...
, most of our knowledge on larvaceans comes from this specific species. Variations in body shape and anatomy exist between families,
although the general body plan stays similar.
Trunk
The trunk can roughly be divided into three regions — pharyngeo-brachial, digestive and genital — which are more or less distinct depending on the genus.
Like in vertebrates, the digestive system comprises in order a mouth, pharynx, oesophagus, stomach, intestine and rectum.
The pharynx is equipped with an
endostyle
The endostyle is an anatomical feature found in invertebrate chordates and larval lampreys. It is an organ which assists chordates in filter-feeding. It is found in adult urochordates and cephalochordates, as well as in the larvae of the vertebra ...
on its lower side, a specialized organ helping direct food particles inside. It also possesses two spiracles, each surrounded by a ring of cilia,
which direct food particles from the inner filter's junction to the mouth.
In some genera like ''Oikopleura'', the tract is U-shaped, with the anus located in a forwards position compared to the stomach and intestine. Others like ''Fritillaria'' present a more segmented appearance, with a straighter digestive tract and well-separated pharyngeal and digestive sections.
Appendicularia retains the ancestral
chordate
A chordate () is an animal of the phylum Chordata (). All chordates possess, at some point during their larval or adult stages, five synapomorphies, or primary physical characteristics, that distinguish them from all the other taxa. These fiv ...
characteristics of having the pharyngeal spiracles and the
anus
The anus (Latin, 'ring' or 'circle') is an opening at the opposite end of an animal's digestive tract from the mouth. Its function is to control the expulsion of feces, the residual semi-solid waste that remains after food digestion, which, d ...
open directly to the outside, and by the lack of the atrium and the atrial siphon found in related classes.
The gonads are located in the posterior section of the trunk, beyond the digestive tract. They are the only section of the body not to be well-distinguished in the juvenile post-tail shift, instead only growing in size in the days leading to spawning.
Tail
The tail of larvaceans contain a central
notochord
In anatomy, the notochord is a flexible rod which is similar in structure to the stiffer cartilage. If a species has a notochord at any stage of its life cycle (along with 4 other features), it is, by definition, a chordate. The notochord consis ...
, a dorsal nerve cord, and a series of striated muscle bands enveloped either by epithelial tissue (oikopleurids) or by an acellular basement membrane (fritillarids). Unlike the ascidian larvae, the tail nerve cord in larvaceans contain some
neurons
A neuron, neurone, or nerve cell is an electrically excitable cell that communicates with other cells via specialized connections called synapses. The neuron is the main component of nervous tissue in all animals except sponges and placozoa. N ...
.
The tail twists during development, with its dorsal and ventral sides becoming left and right sides respectively. In this way, the dorsal nerve cord actually runs through the tail to the left of the notochord, connecting to the rest of the nervous system at the caudal ganglion at the base of the tail.
The muscle bands surrounding the notochord and nerve cord consist of rows of paired muscle cells, or myocytes, running along the length of the tail.
House
To assist in their filter-feeding, larvaceans produce a "house" made of mucopolysaccharides and cellulose, secreted from specialized cells termed oikoplasts.
In most species, the house surrounds the animal like a bubble. Even for species in which the house does not completely surround the body, such as ''
Fritillaria
''Fritillaria'' (fritillaries) is a genus of spring flowering herbaceous bulbous perennial plants in the lily family (Liliaceae). The type species, ''Fritillaria meleagris'', was first described in Europe in 1571, while other species from the ...
'', the house is always present and attached to at least one surface.
The house is secreted from oikoplasts, a specialized family of cells constituting the oikoplastic epithelium. Derived from the
ectoderm
The ectoderm is one of the three primary germ layers formed in early embryonic development. It is the outermost layer, and is superficial to the mesoderm (the middle layer) and endoderm (the innermost layer). It emerges and originates from t ...
, it covers part (in ''Fritillaria'') or all (in ''
Oikopleura
''Oikopleura'' is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small par ...
'') of the trunk.
In larvae, surface fibrils are secreted by the epithelium prior to the differentiation of the oikoplasts, and have been suggested to play a part in the development of the first house, as well as the formation of the cuticular layer.
The houses possesses several sets of filters, with external filters stopping food particles too big for the larvacean to eat, and internal filters redirecting edible particles to the larvacean's mouth. Including the external filters, the houses can reach over one meter in
giant larvaceans, an order of magnitude larger than the larvacean itself. The house varies in shape: incomplete in ''Fritillaria'', it is shaped like a pair of kidneys in ''
Bathochordaeus
''Bathochordaeus'' is a genus of larvacean tunicates in the family Oikopleuridae.
References
* van der Land, J. (2001). Appendicularia, in: Costello, M.J. et al. (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine ...
'', and toroidal in ''
Kowalevskia''.
The arrangement of filters allows food in the surrounding water to be brought in and concentrated prior to feeding, with some species able to concentrate food up to 1000 times compared to the surrounding water.
By regularly beating the tail, the larvacean can generate water currents within its house that allow the concentration of food. For this purpose, the tail fits into a specialized tail sheath, a funnel of the house connected to the exhalent aperture.
The high efficiency of this method allows larvaceans to feed on much smaller
nanoplankton
Plankton are the diverse collection of organisms found in water (or air) that are unable to propel themselves against a current (or wind). The individual organisms constituting plankton are called plankters. In the ocean, they provide a crucia ...
than most other filter feeders.
This specific niche of "mucous-mesh grazers" or "mammoth grazers" has been argued to be shared with
thaliaceans (
salps
A salp (plural salps, also known colloquially as “sea grape”) or salpa (plural salpae or salpas) is a barrel-shaped, planktic tunicate. It moves by contracting, thereby pumping water through its gelatinous body, one of the most efficient ...
,
pyrosomes
Pyrosomes, genus ''Pyrosoma'', are free-floating colonial tunicates that usually live in the upper layers of the open ocean in warm seas, although some may be found at greater depths. Pyrosomes are cylindrical or cone-shaped colonies up to long, ...
and
doliolids) — all using internal mucous structures —, as well as with
sea butterflies
Sea butterflies, scientific name Thecosomata (thecosomes, "case / shell-body"), are a taxonomic suborder of small pelagic swimming sea snails. They are holoplanktonic opisthobranch gastropod mollusks. Most Thecosomata have some form of calcified ...
, a clade of pelagic
sea snails
Sea snail is a common name for slow-moving marine gastropod molluscs, usually with visible external shells, such as whelk or abalone. They share the taxonomic class Gastropoda with slugs, which are distinguished from snails primarily by the ...
similarily using an external mucous web to catch prey, although through passive "flux feeding" rather than active filter-feeding.
Larvaceans have been found to be able to select food particles based on factors such as nutrient avaliability and toxin presence, although both laboratory feeding experiments and ''in situ'' observations show no difference in feeding rate between their usual food sources and microplastics.
They can eat a wide range of particles sizes, down to one ten-thousandth of their own body size, far smaller than other filter-feeders of comparable size.
On the other side of the spectrum, ''Okiopleura dioica'' can eat prey up to 20% of its body size. The upper limit on prey size is set by the mouth size, which in the largest genus ''Bathochordaeus'' is around 1–2 mm wide for a trunk length of 1–3 cm.
In some species, houses are discarded and replaced regularly as the animal grows in size and its filters become clogged; in ''
Oikopleura
''Oikopleura'' is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small par ...
'', a house is kept for no more than four hours before being replaced. In other genera such as ''
Fritillaria
''Fritillaria'' (fritillaries) is a genus of spring flowering herbaceous bulbous perennial plants in the lily family (Liliaceae). The type species, ''Fritillaria meleagris'', was first described in Europe in 1571, while other species from the ...
'', houses can be regularly deflated and inflated, cleaning off particles clogging the filters. Houses being reused in this manner leads to a smaller contribution in marine snow from these genera.
Larvacean houses share key homologies with tunicate tunics, including the use of
cellulose
Cellulose is an organic compound with the formula , a polysaccharide consisting of a linear chain of several hundred to many thousands of β(1→4) linked D-glucose units. Cellulose is an important structural component of the primary cell wall ...
as a material, confirming that the ancestral tunicate already had the capability to synthesize cellulose. This has been confirmed through genetic studies on ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' and the
ascidian
Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians, tunicates (in part), and sea squirts (in part), is a polyphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" ...
''
Ciona
''Ciona'' is a genus of tunicate, sea squirts in the family Cionidae.
The body of ''Ciona'' is bag-like and covered by a tunica (biology), tunic, which is a secretion of the Squamous epithelium, epidermal cells. The body is attached at a permanen ...
'', pinpointing their common cellulose synthase genes as originating with a
horizontal gene transfer
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) or lateral gene transfer (LGT) is the movement of genetic material between Unicellular organism, unicellular and/or multicellular organisms other than by the ("vertical") transmission of DNA from parent to offsprin ...
from a
prokaryote
A prokaryote () is a single-celled organism that lacks a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. The word ''prokaryote'' comes from the Greek πρό (, 'before') and κάρυον (, 'nut' or 'kernel').Campbell, N. "Biology:Concepts & Connec ...
. However, houses and tunics share key differences — while houses are gelatinous and can be deflated or even discarded at will, tunics are rigid structures definitively incorporated into the animal's filter-feeding apparatus.
Ecology
Habitat
Larvaceans are widespread, motile
plankton
Plankton are the diverse collection of organisms found in Hydrosphere, water (or atmosphere, air) that are unable to propel themselves against a Ocean current, current (or wind). The individual organisms constituting plankton are called plankt ...
ic creatures, living through the water column. As their habitats are mostly defined by ocean currents,
many species have a
cosmopolitan distribution
In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The ext ...
, with some like ''Oikopleura dioica'' being found in all of the world's oceans.
Larvaceans have been reported as far as the
Southern Ocean
The Southern Ocean, also known as the Antarctic Ocean, comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60° S latitude and encircling Antarctica. With a size of , it is regarded as the second-small ...
, where they are estimated to comprise 10.5 million tonnes of wet biomass.
Most species live in the photic zone at less than 100 meters in depth,
although
giant larvaceans such as ''
Bathochordaeus mcnutti'' can be found up to 1,400 meters deep,
and undescribed
oikopleurid and
fritillariid species have been reported through the
bathypelagic zone
The bathypelagic zone or bathyal zone (from Greek βαθύς (bathýs), deep) is the part of the open ocean that extends from a depth of below the ocean surface. It lies between the mesopelagic above, and the abyssopelagic below. The bathypelagic ...
, down to the 3,500 meters deep seafloor in
Monterey Bay
Monterey Bay is a bay of the Pacific Ocean located on the coast of the U.S. state of California, south of the San Francisco Bay Area and its major city at the south of the bay, San Jose. San Francisco itself is further north along the coast, by a ...
where they constitute the dominant particle feeders in most of the water column.
Reproduction and life cycle
Larvaceans reproduce
sexually, with all but one species being
protandric hermaphrodites. Unlike all other known larvaceans, ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' shows separate sexes, which are distinguished on the last day of their life cycle through differing gonad shapes.
The immature animals resemble the tadpole larvae of
ascidians
Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians, tunicates (in part), and sea squirts (in part), is a polyphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" ...
, albeit with the addition of developing
viscera
In biology, an organ is a collection of tissues joined in a structural unit to serve a common function. In the hierarchy of life, an organ lies between tissue and an organ system. Tissues are formed from same type cells to act together in a ...
. Once the trunk is fully developed, the larva undergoes "tail shift", in which the tail moves from a rearward position to a ventral orientation and twists 90° relative to the trunk. Following tail shift, the larvacean begins secretion of the first house.
The life cycle is short. The tadpole-shaped larva usually performs the tail shift less than one day after fecundation, becoming fully functional juveniles. Adults usually reproduce after 5 to 7 days depending on the species.
Fertilisation is external. The body wall ruptures during egg release, killing the animal.
Ecological impact
Through their discarded, nutrient-rich houses — termed sinkers — and fecal pellets falling towards the deep seafloor, larvaceans transport large amounts of organic matter towards that region, constituting a significant component of
marine snow
In the deep ocean, marine snow (also known as "ocean dandruff") is a continuous shower of mostly organic detritus falling from the upper layers of the water column. It is a significant means of exporting energy from the light-rich photic zone to ...
.
In that way, they massively contribute to the
oceanic carbon cycle
The oceanic carbon cycle (or marine carbon cycle) is composed of processes that exchange carbon between various pools within the ocean as well as between the atmosphere, Earth interior, and the seafloor. The carbon cycle is a result of many inter ...
, being responsible for up to one-third of the carbon transfer to the deep seafloor in
Monterey Bay
Monterey Bay is a bay of the Pacific Ocean located on the coast of the U.S. state of California, south of the San Francisco Bay Area and its major city at the south of the bay, San Jose. San Francisco itself is further north along the coast, by a ...
. Still in Monterey Bay,
giant larvaceans have been found to have the highest filtration rate of any invertebrate,
and discarded larvacean houses have been observed as a consistent food source for both pelagic and benthic organisms in that same region.
Both larvacean houses and fecal pellets were also found to trap microplastics, before sinking towards the seafloor. In this way, larvaceans are believed to play a part in the missing plastic paradox, transporting microplastics through the water column and to the seafloor. Experiments performed on the giant larvacean ''
Bathochordaeus stygius'' confirm their ability to filter and discard microplastics.
Taxonomy
Appendicularia is most often recovered as the sister group of the other tunicate groups (
Ascidiacea
Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians, tunicates (in part), and sea squirts (in part), is a polyphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" ...
and
Thaliacea
The Thaliacea comprise a class of marine animals within the subphylum Tunicata. Unlike their benthic relatives the ascidians, thaliaceans are free-floating (pelagic) for their entire lifespan. The group includes species with complex life cycle ...
). Already in the late 19th to early 20th century, it was hypothesized by Seeliger and later by Lohmann that Appendicularia diverged first from a free-swimming ancestral tunicate, with sessile forms evolving later in the sister lineage (often termed Acopa).
The following cladogram is based on the 2018 phylogenomic study of Delsuc and colleagues.
Fossil record
Being delicate and soft-bodied, Appendicularia has no definitive fossil record, although the
Cambrian
The Cambrian Period ( ; sometimes symbolized C with bar, Ꞓ) was the first geological period of the Paleozoic Era, and of the Phanerozoic Eon. The Cambrian lasted 53.4 million years from the end of the preceding Ediacaran Period 538.8 million ...
form ''
Oesia disjuncta'' has historically been suggested to belong to the class.
More recently, microfossils covered in an organic coat found in vanadium-rich Cambrian
black shale
Shale is a fine-grained, clastic sedimentary rock formed from mud that is a mix of flakes of clay minerals (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolin, Al2 Si2 O5( OH)4) and tiny fragments (silt-sized particles) of other minerals, especiall ...
s in South China have been suggested to be traces of early larvaceans in their houses, putatively termed "paleoappendicularians".
Vetulicolia
VetulicoliaThe taxon name, Vetulocolia, is derived from the type genus, ''Vetulicola'', which is a compound Latin word composed of ''vetuli'' "old" and ''cola'' "inhabitant". is a taxon (either phylum or subphylum in rank) encompassing several ex ...
ns have also been argued to represent stem-group larvaceans by Dominguez and Jefferies, on the basis of synapomorphies comprising the reduction of the atria and of the gill slits, the position of the anus, and a 90° counter-clockwise torsion of the tail (as seen from behind) around the anterior-posterior axis.
Internal classification
The extant species of the class are divided into three families based on both morphological and genomic criteria:
Kowalevskiidae,
Fritillariidae and
Oikopleuridae
Oikopleuridae is a family of larvacean tunicates (class Appendicularia).
References
* Van der Land, J. (2001). Appendicularia, in: Costello, M.J. et al. (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in ...
.
The first two are believed to be closer to each other, sharing more derived characteristics compared to the primitive Oikopleuridae.
Fritillariidae itself is subdivided into
Fritillariinae and the monotypic
Appendiculariinae, while Oikopleuridae is split into
Bathochordaeinae and
Oikopleurinae. Deeper phylogeny is unclear, with genera such as ''
Oikopleura
''Oikopleura'' is a genus of Tunicata (sea-squirts) in the class Appendicularia. It forms a mucus house every four hours at 20 degrees Celsius. This house has a coarse mesh to keep out big particles, and a fine mesh that collects the small par ...
'' possibly being paraphyletic.
Several key morphological differences distinguish the families. Fritillariidae presents a more tapered, compressed trunk, as compared to the rounder one of the other two families. Meanwhile, Kowalevskiidae is notable for lacking the heart and endostyle present in other families, the latter replaced by a ciliated groove without glandular cells. The shape of the spiracles also differs: simple holes in Fritillariidae, they appear as long narrow slits in Kowalevskiidae, and tubular passages in Oikopleuridae.
While the number of described species is comparatively low, the class is believed to harbour massive diversity in the form of
cryptic species
In biology, a species complex is a group of closely related organisms that are so similar in appearance and other features that the boundaries between them are often unclear. The taxa in the complex may be able to hybridize readily with each oth ...
. For instance, ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' comprises at least three distinct, reproductively incompatible clades despite a similar morphological appearance.
Not all species are equally well-studied. The popularity of ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' as a model organism and its ease of cultivation have led to studies disproportionately focusing on this species' anatomy, and ''in situ'' observations on ''
Bathochordaeus charon'' have been performed by the
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a private, non-profit oceanographic research center in Moss Landing, California. MBARI was founded in 1987 by David Packard, and is primarily funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation ...
.
Meanwhile, studies of Kowalevskiidae and Fritillariidae are comparatively rarer and more limited.
Use as a model species
The dioecious ''
Oikopleura dioica
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a species of small pelagic tunicate found in the surface waters of most of the world's oceans. It is used as a model organism in research into developmental biology.
Description
''Oikopleura dioica'' is a bioluminescent ...
'' is the only larvacean species that has successfully been cultured in laboratory.
The ease of cultivation, combined with extremely small genome size and recent development of techniques for expressing foreign genes in ''O. dioica'', has led to the advancement of this species as a model organism for the study of gene regulation,
chordate
A chordate () is an animal of the phylum Chordata (). All chordates possess, at some point during their larval or adult stages, five synapomorphies, or primary physical characteristics, that distinguish them from all the other taxa. These fiv ...
evolution, developmental biology, and ecology.
Notes
References
*
*
{{Taxonbar, from=Q28960
Chordate classes
de:Copelata